There is only one way to write the traditional Chinese character "Bao":
Bao: [bǎo]?
basic explanation
1. Jade, referring to precious things in general? : Baby. Sword. Treasure.
2.? The emperor's seal refers to the throne? : the throne. Deng Dabao (the emperor ascended the throne).
3.? Courtesy, used to call someone else's treasure. Bao Hao (address other people's shops).
4.? Refers to metal currency? : Yuanbao.
5.? A kind of gambling equipment? : Kaibao.
Evolution of glyphs:
Extended information:
Classical Chinese version of Shuo Wen Jie Zi: treasure and treasure. From Mi, from Wang, from Bei, from Sheng. Gu, an ancient prose treasure, is a provincial shell.
vernacular version of Shuo Wen Jie Zi: treasure, a treasure in the family collection. The glyph uses "Mi, Wang, Bei" as the side and "Yi" as the sound side. This is the "treasure" written in ancient Chinese, omitting the "shell".
Related words:
1. Magic weapon [f?b 鷼 o]?
explanation: Buddhist terms refer to the dharma spoken by the Buddha, as well as the mantle used by monks and xizhang.
2. Pagoda [b? o t?]?
explanation: the laudatory name of the tower. In the past, Buddhists decorated the tower with seven kinds of treasures, such as gold, silver and glass, hence the name. This refers to the tower in general.
treasure house
[b? o k?]?
Metaphorically, there are many precious things in it (often used in abstraction): theory. Culture.
3. Treasure [gu Ι b ? o]?
explanation: something particularly precious: Dunhuang frescoes are among the ancient Chinese arts.
4. Treasure [b? ozdang]?
explanation: refers to the minerals buried underground; develops the underground treasures.
5. Sword [b? ojian]?
explanation: it originally refers to rare and precious swords, and later it generally refers to ordinary swords.